4.7 Article

Study on calcium catalyzes coal spontaneous combustion

Journal

FUEL
Volume 307, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2021.121884

Keywords

Calcium-containing compounds; Coal spontaneous combustion; Oxidation; Chemical structure of coal; Catalytic

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52074147]

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Through experiments, this study found that calcium in coal has a catalytic effect on the spontaneous combustion process of coal, breaking alkyl side chains of organic matter to generate aliphatic and small molecular hydrocarbons. The catalytic effect of calcium-containing catalysts depends on the moisture and carboxyl group content in the coal.
Metal elements are good catalysts for oxidation reactions. In order to explore the influence of metal elements in coal on the reaction of organic matter in coal with oxygen, this paper studies the influence of the macro-element calcium in coal on the spontaneous combustion of coal. Using experiments to simulate the spontaneous combustion reaction process of coal, the results show that CaO, CaCO3 and Ca(Ac)(2) have a catalytic effect on the oxidation of organic matter in coal. In-situ infrared spectroscopy is used to analyze the changes of characteristic functional groups in the process of calcium catalyzed by coal oxidation. It is believed that calcium enters the coal structure by ion exchange and has a catalytic effect in the form of calcium oxide. The calcium oxide in the coal structure cracks the alkyl side chains on the condensed aromatic hydrocarbons to generate aliphatic hydrocarbons and a part of small molecular hydrocarbons. The catalytic effect of calcium-containing catalysts is determined by the content of moisture and carboxyl groups in the coal. The results can provide new ideas for preventing the spontaneous combustion of coal.

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